It would seem that a statement from a country’s president such as this would quell some of the disharmony but yet it still continues and it is extremely hard to understand why. This is especially true when these cells can save lives because they can reproduce blood cells and this is something that people can not live without because life can not continue without blood cells in the blood stream. Also, stem cells can be found in many types of adult tissue, and not only do stem cells help replace blood cells they replenish all cells that the human body normally wears out.
It is also being found that blood stem cells can change the course of life by having the ability to produce skin cells, liver cells, or any cell other then a blood stem cell (PLOS Medicine 2006). Scientists have uncovered this amazing technology through their advanced research in animals. Untold amounts of gathered data and research have shown that animals have helped to prove that stem cells previously thought to be committed to the development of one line of specialized cells are able to develop into others.
Recent experiments in these animals have shown that different cells have developed out of bone marrow, especially liver cells (Schwartz 2006). From all the research which is being done and all the research which has been done there seems to be enormous promise in stem cells with regard to the development of new therapies for the most devastating of diseases. Science and scientists are searching for the very best sources for these stem cells, and when these are identified, regardless of their source, scientists and researchers will use them to pursue the development of new cell therapies.
The development of stem cell lines, both pluripotent and multipotent, which produce many tissues of the human body are an unquestionably important scientific breakthrough. It seems that with the way research and science is going, if it continues on this pace then there is potential to revolutionize the practice of medicine and improve the quality and length of life. One area that it could definitely place a positive influence in is with the disease of “Diabetes”. About 1.4 million people in the UK have been diagnosed with diabetes and another million have the condition but don't know it yet.
The disease means the pancreas doesn't produce enough insulin - the chemical which helps control blood sugar. Scientists are working on a possible cure, which involves creating insulin-producing cells, known as islets, from stem cells and then transplanting them into the pancreas (Snow 2005). Studies at the University of Florida found that stem cells from a patient's bone marrow could be a viable source of islets, while researchers at New York University have had some success creating islet tissue in mice (Snow 2005).
This is just an example to show that the continuation of research in stem cells could lead to curable summations of diseases in the next ten to fifteen years, at least for the disease of diabetes. Stem Cell Research: The Dilemma With everyday that passes people who have terminal illnesses or who need organ transplants die. The estimated amount of these deaths which could be saved by stem cell research is approximately 3,000 a day in the United States. Many of these people are dying while waiting on organ transplants (D’Agnese).
Not only is this a detrimental problem to sustaining life that could be rectified through the utilization of stem cell research but over 66,000 people remain on organ donor lists in the United States, making the possible deaths escalate due to the need for organ donors and also the limited supply of the necessary organs for these people. The sad point to this dilemma is that few of these people in need of organ transplants will ever live to see their names rise to the top of the organ transplant recipient list and scientists who work in stem cell research say that there is just no plausible nor logical explanation for people such as this suffering in this way or having to die when science has the ability of meeting their needs and sustaining human life.
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